The state Department of Correction's Prisoner Reentry Initiative offers help for finding work to Edgecombe County's prisoner population.
Roshanna Parker, a program director with the Department of Correction, said the initiative was started by a $450,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Department of Labor. The money was given to the state's Department of Correction in September, she said.
The initiative will offer job-skills training in a one-on-one setting, Parker said. The training will include interview skills, learning how to look for a job through the internet and showing how to look for a job that matches a prisoner's skill set.
David Tiller is the job developer who will serve prisoners in Edgecombe and Nash counties. He works out of the Employment Security Commission offices in Rocky Mount, and Parker said he is expected to help 110 offenders in the two counties by the end of 2009.
Aside from the one-on-one training, Parker said Tiller will work as a liaison to community employers on behalf of the offenders. She also said Tiller will work to find other job training opportunities for offenders, whether at a community college, through ESC or with on-the-job training with an employer.
"Employment is one fo the major barriers that they face when they're released from prison," Parkers said.
"We're hoping that (the initiative) has long-term benefits, and that people realize that we need designated staff to help these people stay out of prison."
The Prisoner Reentry Initiative is only available for offenders who are less than six months away from release or who have been released for less than six months. The program's federal guidelines prohibit violent offenders and prisoners convicted of sex-related crimes from participating in the program, Parker said.
Funding for the initiative runs through June 30, 2010, and it is only available to offenders in four North Carolina counties: Edgecombe, Nash, Mecklenburg and New Hanover.
Local News
Program will help ex-cons find work
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Bryant declines to seek re-election
Teresa DeLoatch Bryant announced she will not seek re-election to the District 2 seat she now holds on the Edgecombe County Public Schools Board. The announcement came 91 days before the May 8 Primary Election and nearly a year after the first-term plus one year board member announced her resignation for personal and career reasons. She later rescinded her decision.
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W.A. Patillo receives $5,000 poetry grant
W.A. Pattillo School has been awarded $5,000 from the North Carolina Arts Council for Poetry in the Classroom with Mimi Herman.
The funds will be used to provide a week of poetry writing experiences for seven fourth grade classes through the expertise and creativity of Herman. Students will gain self-confidence, and will view themselves as writers rather than merely consumers of literature. They will learn to use language effectively and creatively to communicate thoughts, feeling, and impressions. -
Pizza Bowl
The biggest football game of the year brings the largest sale of the year for two area pizza restaurants.
Tarboro branches of Pizza Inn and Dominos Pizza are gearing up for Super Bowl XLVI Sunday by increasing their regular employee lineup by as many as seven.
Pizza Inn is running a special that they believe will keep them busy throughout the day. Last year they sold over 200 large pizzas on Super Bowl Sunday compared to 50 on an average Sunday. -
Edgecombe unemployment up in December
TARBORO — Unemployment rates increased in 93 of North Carolina’s 100 counties in December. Rates decreased in four counties and remained the same in three.
Edgecombe, which saw a slight improvement in November, fell back to its October 2011 level (15.7%). Of the 100 counties in North Carolina, Edgecombe and Dare are tied at third highest in unemployment. -
Three ECPS campuses ahead of First Lady's nutritional guidelines
When First Lady Michelle Obama and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced new guidelines for the nutritional overhaul of school meals last week, they could have chosen three of Edgecombe County's public schools as their models.
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ECC Executive Named to United Way Board
J. Lynn Cale, associate vice president of instruction at Edgecombe
Community College, has been named to the United Way Tar River Region
Board of Directors.
The Tar River Region serves Edgecombe and Nash counties. Cale
will serve a one-year term, from January to December 2012.
He and other board members oversee 41 local health and human
service programs funded through United Way as well as 21 Community
Partners and various community development partnerships.
RIGHT: J. Lynn Cale -
Pattillo Alumni Association on the move
The Board of Directors (BOD) of W.A. Pattillo High School National Alumni
Association, Inc. held a meeting on Jan. 21, at Pattillo School under the leadership of its President, Dr. Fred S. Wood, Jr. All of the officers except one were in attendance, accompanied by 9 of 16 Board Members and 9 of 10 Appointed Standing Committee Chairpersons. -
Local students selected for N.C. Eastern All-District Band
Three Edgecombe County Public Schools students have been chosen to play in the All-District Band. Lillian House, an alto saxophone player and Kaitlin Driver, a French horn player both eighth graders from South Edgecombe Middle School and West Edgecombe Middle School eighth grade flute player, Taylor Joyner earned the honor this year and will grace the stage at East Carolina University’s Wright Auditorium Feb. 3.
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Robbery prevention
Community education on robbery prevention shares equal importance with the search of robbery suspects. Robbery prevention may seem unachievable, but we can not continue to ignore the problem of robbery in our community. As local citizens, we should create ways in which everyone can benefit from the knowledge of robbery prevention.
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George Henry White: tribute to a great American
Why isn’t George Henry White a household name? If Vincent Spalding has anything to do with it, that will soon change.
Long ignored in African American history books and recognitions, George Henry White of North Carolina was elected to Congress in 1896, and re-elected in 1898, becoming the last African American elected to Congress after Reconstruction, and the first to serve in the 20th century. - More Local News Headlines
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